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16 responses to “Contact”

Dave

April 12, 2008 at 6:24 am

Hi Clint,
I just read your most recent article in the Tooele Transcript titled “Afternoon at Grantsville Reservoir yields more than fish”. I’m new to the area. My wife and I just moved here from Southern California. So far I have thoroughly enjoyed reading your articles and I can’t wait to start exploring some of the areas you write about. In regards to your lack of luck in fishing, I have grown up fishing and I’m quite skilled at it. One of the most enjoyable parts of fishing for me is sharing with other people. I have shared my knowledge and skills with many people in the past and it is so rewarding to watch someone catch a fish using information I have shared with them. As a thank you for all the wonderful information you have shared through your articles I would love to spend a day fishing with you, sharing my knowledge and skills with you. I have faith that we can get you and your kids catching some fish. How would you like to write an article about a successful fishing trip? Let me know if you are interested and thank you again for the wonderful articles. Keep up the great work.

Clint,
I was interested by the mention of you in the AP article on ghost towns. As both a former Tooelean AND a “ghost”,i.e. one-time resident of what is now a ghost town (Darwin Mines, CA), I thought I’d give you a shout. Come to think of it, any discussion of lost history and landscape in Tooele Valley would have to include the once-desolate Millpond area that became Stansbury Park!
One other note of interest- I live in rural New England, and the woods are full of the stone cellar holes of abandoned villages, left to die when the residents moved west or to the factory cities. Many a township had more people 200 years ago than now. Even Massachusetts and Connecticut have ghost towns of a sort.

I read Heather Clark’s article in the San Diego Union Tribune on Aug. 10th. It got me thinking about ghost towns again. I’m a healthy old lady (77) and still like the outdoors. At this time I don’t have access to off-road places but I like to read about them.

Right on! I live not far from the grist mill, and technically the land my house sits on was part of E.T. City (I’m told it was on land that was a turkey farm). Stansbury Park is now more populated than Grantsville, which means this is the second time that Stansbury (then E.T. City/Richville) has been the second most populated place in the county!

I’d love to explore some of those old places in New England. Talk about saturated with history! That’s one of the places I truly have never really explored at all. Thanks for the comment.

Hi!
Great article on Salt Air. I’m looking for someone that can tell me what the colors were on the Salt Air II roofs and buildings. I would like to do a large scale painting – all of the photos are black and white of course and the postcards that I’ve seen are of the first Salt Air. Any information would be great

Hello Clint,
Just read your article on geocaching and it is great. I have been geocaching for over two years. caches from UT, ID. MT, NV, AZ, WY and Canada have been found. My grandchildren love to go with me. Most of my caches are at Bear Lake. Thanks for your interesting articles. I have read several of them.
Say hi to Ming.
Keep “Caching”.

I have a group of large investors interested in building a major resort back on the Great Salt Lake like unto the second Saltair plus run a high speed train out there plus one to tour most of the lake. Although this group needs full sets of architectural drawing of Saltair that was rebuild in 1925. Plus a history of the resort under the ownership of Howell, Cannon and Snow. Are you able to help us in this endevour.

My name is Jennifer Musser (not to be confused with the Jennifer above). I am an anthropology undergraduate student from Weber State University. I am doing a research project on the Saltair palace progression throughout space and time. I am researching what the material culture was of the ongoing times, the progression of the Saltair in competition with Lagoon, and finally the progression of the Saltair with the many fluctuations of the Great Salt Lake.

I have many pictures of myself and my family with the burnt out car 502 and the substation building that used to live nearby, but I am wondering if I might have your permission to use some of your other 502 pictures on your blog. Please email me, as it is much easier to catch me by email than by the phone.